Naugatuck Daily News from Naugatuck, Connecticut · Page 4

Page Four ^•^^••a •••^^•W^^B^^M (TObe NAUGATUCK DAILY NEWS Published Every Evcnln.fr (Except Sunday) by THE NAUGATUCK NEWS CORPORATION NAUGATUCK, CONNECTICUT iilul 222i>—All llupiirlinrntti Entered on jsucond cl«.s.s niatlur lit the post office it NniiEutuck, Conn. SUBSCRIPTION HATES Payable In Advance 1 month J .75 0 months 3 months *2.2S 1 year $9.0. .„ 1'I.KllGK TO Till'; FLAG—"I plfdeu ill!"' Ktunct' to the 1'liiK uf tlio Ui'i'wl .Sliitt-x ti. .AmiTlcik innl tu tin- Jtcpiilillc fur which I itiuKln. One iiulinii hxlivlslMis with l.iliurtj und iliiNUcf! fur all." MONDAY, AUGUST 21, IM-I PLAYGROUNDS APPRECIATED The six loc.'il play^i-oiiia'ks which wore cloyed Just- Fi'ithiy al'lor a \ - cry s 1'til summer season, h;ivu C'. tlfnioustrtitfd tlio vjiluo of pliiy ;iii(l its bcueficiiil (.'I'l'ects tin t.lio large ninnlier ol' fliiklivn who spunl many happy hours tlioi'o. The playyToumls not mily provided recix-atiou fur the yoim^-sU'i-s, lint thoy iilso rendL'iX'd ,-i fun- sorvim: tu many ptir- fiits en^at;'0il in \vjir \vorl\. !>y taking good win,' of tliL'ir litt.lu ones uui'ing thu daytime. Thu fact l.liat tlii:y u'utv well patronized slio\vs I hoy woiv appi'i'cialod bv botli ytiiMiLfstcTs <md parents. AWAITED WITH INTEREST ifany Xaui^aUick ^"It 1 oiit!nisi;i. s 'l.s II.TV^ l)Ctin u \viii ting \vit.li k'L'oii ititL'ivst tlio opunini; tochiy ;it (,'liifa^D of tin; -All- Anicric;iii golf toiiniMnifiit in wliicli Hilly .Burko, n furnior vositluiif, is en- tonx'l. Billy wtui the Xatinnal I')JH'>II gulf cluiin- piiHisliip hack in lll.'il in 01:0 uf thi 1 ninst hotly coiitx-sU-d and i.-xciting g:iiiiL-s in thu history d\' tht' popular spurt. -Although lie has not capture'! aiidtht.'!' natinnal litlc since, liiirki 1 , \vho nmv ivsitlos in Ck've- hnul, has at:i.[iiittOil liiinsfll' fi'tnlitalily in tithor dig tiiiiriianii.'iits tlinniglioiit (.lie 1 C'liintiy. and his many I'rit'iids hupo lit: will xhtnv somc of his ohl-tinu: form in this week's event. Tlicixc; whn attC'iidcd tin. 1 rocioptinn given to Hilly liy his t'dlnw X:nigatiu'l\- i.'ins 'lii.-ri', t'olluwing hi's winning ol' lln- National Open, will always rememlier the warmth uf the greeling tendered him in true Xangutin/k style. Il was one ol' the most on.joyalilc a'nd nnt'iirgettalih: events in the history of this community. find was a splendid exemplification of local pnclo in the achievement and success of a boy \vho learned his golf 'when he served as a cacklv club. at the .Hop BONDS AND INFLATION It is not the buying of bonds by individuals which is dangerous—it's the not- buying-enongh by individuals. That leads to lai^er buying by banks than is their fair proportion, and buying by banks is mi inflationary mnve.. Now that the war shows signs of being over before (he year's end, many individuals are thinking it is ail right to cash tlieir bunds in at any time. Hut it isn't. They should 'be held as long as possible; Jf u tV.mily wants to buy a home after the war, the wise thing is to have some money in the hank to start out with, as well as the bonds. Saving as much cash as possible for the down payment, besides buying bonds to lay away, is a great protoclmn. The house can then be bought without drawing heavily on the bond supply. Monthly payments take the place of rent. "When the bonds come dm 1 , Ihey can go, one by one on the homo, thus relieving the bur- clou very greatly at that. time. Meantime, illness or accident can be taken care of by them if necessary. They are thus more than the usual protection for the home- btiying process. Almost everything for ?ale today is high ii> price and poor in quality. "\Vait tu buy tilings, if at all possible. Bank the money instead, and keep on buying bonds. .Reconversion unemployment lias no terrors for the family with money in the bank.to carry on until the next job conies. It is a time for thrift. The Turks have finally decided that the Allies will win the war. They dare to break with Germany. That will help. "Will Bulgaria be next'.' After Bulgaria the other Balkan states may fall into line. Bomnnin is unhappy, Jugoslavia in active rebellion. DO YOU REMEMBER? From The Files Of The News 20 Years Ago Violot Johnson, Lois Olson, Elsie Thompson, and Isabel Carlson, nil of New street, mid IDellti 'Dahlin oC Hillside UVCIHIC returned from a vacation Cornwall.. o—O—o Raymond Jennings rind Juntos Qtiinn represented, local firemen ;U the convention in Went Haven. Tno^local department did not participate' in the fluid, day activities there. o—O—o 30 Years Ago Carriers John Finnan and Mat-how Maher of. the local Post Office wore expecting their unnual vacations. o—O—o I-Iav.ftl and Celiii Clark oC Straitsville visited in New Haven. o—O—o Mary Knlhburn of. Ward street returned from a visit to Bristol. Around the Clock .Kli'/alieth Canlrieh.l i>\' !'5 Aetna street is roc'L'ivin.tf her mail al. Wat.erbury pital w!n. Alberta . P.ehlmaii, ploasiiru-l'nll wool< al. .Indian Neck and H ran lord. The only casually .was :i siiyhl. lauL-ratiiUi In AlliL'i'ta, whu cut. her die on si'Hiuthinn' in the wafer. osi: she is a surgical patient ..... nge, Durolhy K'uherts, 1'iiyliss aiitl 'Helen Krs/.lcnwski spent a Mrs. Edward Fox und daughter, Mary Isabel, of Dunn avenue are spending the time at the present at Bay View~in 4 Milford Pfc. Howard C. 'Sills, Jr., of Cocke road, Prospect, has grown two inches since he left for the Marines Dec. 23, 1941. The leatherneck is now 6 feet, 4 inches. Howard, well-known locally, has seen quite a bit of action in the Scuthwest Pacific. He's never been home on furlough. I) \V\XM' ol iinioii In Old Orcluml .1 loi'O ;iro :i i;" Kk'inin-, AS. ii'.yn. ( ' tu tin; laud df he I''. S, Post OlTict' •< (.'mi ilnymcnl in tin' ;I|'(I.T s.]ii!iidiny :i \vu<-'k ;U ln-;ii' - .h*ii|) in Maine iph; ill' addresses: .Inri'it's .F. L.'SX ;md DO. Onii'ip Kiliul, ll l'\'i. SU'VtMl .1 US- t!01. !.'OS(, I'VtNii nor N r . V., i-i'tni'lH'il n'Oi's vcslord.'iv i. US.MC, C.li.li K'l'pl. Bn.. San l''i'aiic:sfu, (.'al. . . . \'ix: linif h'ii.a St-l.'iilx ol' iMav Mr. and Mrs. Carl Pepperman of Woodlawn terrace are up in Maine vacationing this week John Schmuck of The Naug-atuck Fuel Co. is up on Nantucket island off Massachusetts, joining his family in spending the rest of the month, and maybe a little more, just resting Junior Dinkle of Aetna street was a vacationer at the Milford shore Mrs. Andrew McDermott of Breen's enjoyed a rest last week. .I'M. .l of AVI 'Humid Siilor. (:u._ " (,'imip Wlic.'Qlur. G;i. body ..I l.llOl'l.U'l '4-1 r.i: Camp -s Siilor, Cl;iss selmul, is din h'npi:," in :i lulli'i', s;iys nddross is Pvl:. 1.21.1.1 Bn., IT 1-5, . . •\Vil.h evnry- in^' M 'nit dl' postwnr p|;i •\vo sliniild gel; in on l.he iny,'' l.uo. "\\ T L>, lioiny ensy to plo.iso, Avanl. "lily five now lirt.'S—.;i(; pre-\v;ir pi-ices— Fur (,)id Reliucca, our ear, and sonic time .'ind siii'i"n!'/.(!, and somel.iody to do ahout $400 \vorlli oi' rep.'iir*. And wo will he very liappy when service stations vetnrn to ('leaning' windshields. We I'ind it kinda luiigli ilriviny locomotive 1 engineer fashion. Mrs. Augusta Anderson of Puller street visited in Bristol Mrs. Ray Kennedy is back on her feet after a stay in the hospital Mary Reilly of Highland circle is getting ready, little by little, for a trip to the center of learning at Storrs. Jane Garrick, Pleasant View street, a junior at the University of Connecticut, has been giving Mary the lowdown of the place. The old-l'asliioried sailing junk used to be ii picturesque siglit ihnt impressed travelers in the China seas. The junk, till lately n I most entirely driven out by the steamer, Js now coining 1 back. So great is Iho Japanese shipping' shortage that anything (hat floats is welcoinc. Hy r.CKiA.N CI'.KNDliMNC. M. i> A Wartime I'rolilem WI-flLiS .;NFE.STA']-;OX with this liody louse is v«ry common in the Unitetl States and h;is been so f:u' tis niomary reached it has not cunstituteil a suriuus health nicn- :ia.! until now. Umlur wartime conditions witii lai'K'e niir.iljers of the |)i»pnl;ition who l;;t\ r t: bi^cn :n arens v.-huri: ilioru is lyphus ur relapsing fevi.T retiiruiiiK to the United Stales, they may eumo back with sumo of the Kerms in their blood, rriie all returning soldiers, sailors. UK! marines are supposed to be de-. loused before they re-enter their cu tin try, but accidents will happen and anyway the service man who has become a reservoir for louse- borne diseases may pick up u crop if lieu and these may proceed to prr;:id the disease to the civil population. :Sven if this is a somewhat re- mole possibility tliuci; are |j!e!iiy of other fjood reasons for ^ettir.;; rid of such 111 thy things u.s lice. •\jid since e\ r ery once in a while someone in even the highest so- ::iity comes homo with a head full •jf lice, it is a problem which affects tl-.H hif,'h and the low, the clean and the dirty, and you might as well know whnt to do. There ti i'e IAVO varieties of lice— tho head louse and the body louse, nnd thuy sticii.]jruUy much to tlv-'ir own territory. The head louse can be detected by seeing the animal itself slithering in and out amontt 1 lhn hafrs, as Burns (lid that day in church which inspired him to write the evei'lastinK lines: "Oh! wad some power the Kiftic ;:ic us. Tn K.IC ourselves iis ithers sec us." And even if you c'.on't sco the bea.slie itself you can detect the uR'ds onmontotl to a hair looking for al; the world like little if.".'Jus of sand or salt. Of course the infested victim usually knows it by the itching. If be has never had | any lint.* before he'may be attacked by a sudden, mysterious itchir.^: of the scalp or body. The old;, hand knows rii;ht away what the'itch, is due to. r lUMiiovint; Body Lice On the body, lice leave little red blood clot spots which may be. a Rtiiilc to thu fact of invasion. The proper treatments for louse infestation of the body is first and foremost to Ket them out of all the underwear and clothes. i\ll the clothes must bo steamed and pressed with a hot iron, Such clothing: as can be boiled should.' be boiled. . .-, Most insect powders do 'not" touch them. Sulphur powder, or -L jiou-der made up of- ,f>6 'parts 1 naphthalene. 2 parts iodot'orm and 2 parts of. crcsotc usually is of- fect.ivo. If the -clothing is f'-ecd from them they are not often- round on tho body afterwards."be-. 15y IlIiI.EN ESSARY (Centnil Vress Columnist) Expect Congress To Lawmakers Beaten In Settle Reconversion Primary Tests Want Question Soon Jots Concluded WASHINGTON"—Congress will duntial hopes, there sat Senator down and 'suti.lc that re- ! Harold Burton of Ohio -.vorkinsr cor.vursion problem quickly, is the | nv/ny with pfiicil and papers. Jut-:t: opinion of the behind the scenes people at the Capitol. There will be a certain amount of fireworks and maneuvers, hui. not ns much delay as you might expect from the goings rill :ii the opening of t.he debate uf the Kil;.'ore-Murray bill and the George amendment thereto. The reason ror this is that .too 1 many members nf congivss. of the sen.-fte ('.specially, ,'ire rnncl about something. When you are mad. or as this present eoiwess you do cause they rumain attached to the' slothing; even while feeding. Tho body should lie thoroughly bathed and scrubbed and the hairy parts where scratch marks or scales am seen should bo shaved, Altci- the. bath the skin surface should l)'o ponged Nvith Bcnxenc, 'u . Trontmciit for Hraid JAco ' ' The head louse is a somewhat. 1 more complicated animal to Kot rid of. Thn.head can bo shaved and that will do the trick, but there are obvious disadvantages to that. Tho old method of treatment was to soak thchoad.and hair :horoU£Thly in oqual parts of crudo petroleum and olive oil and band- has been hero and iho not want to dally around. You want to whnok OIH your job. Got it over with nnd £,'O on home and play n your ou*n back yard. The .sonali?, as I looked down on its debate or. ho\v to peaceably convert workers, n^'Uers and in- lustrialists to a peace-Lime world ivh^ii Ihe war is ended, ^:a\'e .as complete a picu;re of le^iskitoi'S with a mad. on as you will ever this mercurial town. 1 This mad wn.s not visible to tlui naked oyc;, even from the Rallerlcs. ]'L \vas concealed behind .a polite public manner. Bin. y f)l i knew it was there, if you remembered only a liulc of what has been happening in politics and government ; ln the past month or so. Hi^;h in the t.cacher's seat, watching the class carry on, was Henry Wallace who wanted to ,be vice president. ae;ain and wos told at the last mir.ut-C that he wouldn't do. In the A'ronp below was Senator l-iatt^e Caraway, defeated for re- nominatinn in Arkansas, Mrs. Caraway inns;, have been mad inside. .Bui she had camou flawed disappointment v.'ith a cascade of frills. doublc-rulT.in;;' down the front of her V-neck black dress and at its short sleeves, This is the ilrst time since Mrs Caraway has been in the senate UI.IL I havo seen her solemn black relieved by a tonch of white. Maybe Mrs. Caraway is celebrating her release from Iho legislative stru^^le Senator Marry Eyrcl around whom Virginia wrapped her hopes of a presidential candidate was on the Democratic side though, nobody has called him a New Deal- .er-.for years. Claude Pepper of. .Florida who had faint holies of. beatins 1 Ti:'iiman for the viccpresi- ci(jnti:.i.l oandici.'icy >\ p :i.s talking out loud in support of the administration. Albc'n Barkley who would not havif '-minded atall being; the vir.c- prusidontial nominee was speaking ,up now arid then. Senator Robert Taf:t ir 'on "whom the Dcwoy toft'a miKlit have fallen was busy watch- inir the Republican plays. y. l-.didn'.t sec ..my old friends Senators Bennett 'Clark and D Worth. Clark, recently defeated for vcnoin- •', motion for the sc^na^te. Kemictl; and- Worth will be greatly missed. • ., Spoalting of thn faces on the sen- late-Vriooi 1 and not particularly of. its as he KCnorally does while the senate is in session. Senator j3urtnn sends out a report to G.OOO of his constituents every six months. H^ I'xpl.'iins that he spends one-fourth of his time on ihi? floor, one-fourth in' -his ollice, seeing con.slituentii, one-fourth visiting the departments and one-fourth an.sweriny mail. Turning to the ladies—.seems to me that those rival glamor Kirls Congress wo man Clare Luce iR> of Connecticut and Conjrresswoman Candidate Helen Gahugaii U3) nf California are clever in their present silor.co about each other. And sii!! more or. the ladies—Bertha Joseph, secretary de lux.: to Senator Gcarsti KadcliJ'fe of Maryland, has a plan—when she comes to congress tMiss Joseph is goinu to run some day) to ask for a Woman's West Point and a Woman's Annapolis Miss Joseph believes (and very soundly, too, I thinkJ that women are in the services to stay. ; Thc WACS, the WAVES, the SPARS and Lady Marines are showing. such elliciency it is unlikely that the Army ;ind the Nav\ will want to yet on without them. So, argues Miss Joseph, establish proper tr;u:ving centers for th future women otllccrs in a! brandies of the services. Just as you have for the men. Give the women the adv.-ini.iges the men have. Place the schools on the west coast or in the miudlc west. Those areas have always wanted military schools. You're Telling Me! By WILLIAM KITT (Centnil l-ress writer) WONDER, if that Massachusetts cat, which inherited $100,000, cele- braied the fact by blowing' its pals to a quart of milk—homogenized. Wasted-'prcsidfcnti.il- and vice-presi- A Britisher is reported to have invented a noiseless r4otorcycle. k -Oh, come now—tho postwar world 'won't be THAT windcrful! Tho Nazi 'soldier appears to have ah.nulriMcd the. one-armed Jlillor salllto for two-mined or "K:i.iuer:ul!" gesture, ^ Women, it used to be a truism, a.re more interosiod ' in creating a nuat, well-groomed appearance than arc men. And then someone had to go and invent slacks.' MONDAY; AUGUST 21, 1944 1 BIRDS OF PASSAGE . •- k »-TX. *-«a5*i^* . -• "'•- .?•• • ""V-^TV • -, ' -\. - -• • . •. • . . • •» MIND AND BODY" ^^^— ^^=^^ ^—~»^M Broadway and Elsewhere ByJACKLAIT 'THE DEATH-HATTU3 of to Vic P«ri.ii«nnc. n. co/.y little niKUt club in the heart of the ru.™n«I- ,-umba belt, w ;J .s an authentic echo of busincKS as it is of- 0 " conducted around that incredible, indescribable y-uncy' *°ne called ?">»*- wuy When our impatient Mayor kcd down and ordered tho works auctioned off. it developed that the li<)uor wu.s inorlsixKft'l, «"• name wa« wort«aged, the piano Wi i» 'rented, the outrtt owed everybody and didn't oven h.-,.vc a bank was account. Yet this was concern, and might have kop ins indcnnitely, had noi the taken over its receipts for back .sales taxes...Opcr.-itin;,' on a frayed shoestring is the norm.il • < «-a"> s of thousands alonj,' tho &my JJ>- anonal. Yd l"« s '- ^ov.i:i.n'^ cat »rt<l drink and love and live and kcpp on Koing, sometimes pay-ins, from hand to mouth, until somebody with no sense of humor £ol.s touiih and technical. Th'en they :ir<? suddenly «oin^', going—«one. Customers' men f.or bookmakers and bucket-shoppers; agents who make nickels by introducing hams to other nsonts, operate in public iHr-phonc booths "rind carry sandwiches in their frayed trousers, pockets; actors who haven't worked in years, yet who not only have hope, but swear they will never i "lower their standard" of salaries paid them in the foggy past, when vaudeville was big business; animal trViiners. aeroljats, juffglers, wire-w.-ilkors, pitchmen, prosudigi- uiters and washed-up p"S s n - 11 Hiwidfastly rcfusin;,' to become waiters or window-washers, congregate, chfw over the good old days and tell each other NEXT season—you just wait and see.' Yet they exist somehow, 'unaffected by conditions which touch the lives (if the rest of us. And as long as no one suddenly calls them to specific and immediate account—they remain "going concerns." citi/.'-'ns, In key posts. Wi-hi week, Osmcnsi, full-blooded nnlal fired half of them. 7IOLLYWOODIA: P, : plnyinK Iho Cal-N>va Lake Tahoc, Northern ;ind drawing tr/ifJc from av/:;y nn Lo.s Angcl««. is ing to cut i-ud t:,pe H0 adopt thren war orphans. .Tomniv Dorscy, Pat JDuno nnd Par* aw er wore in Charley Foya whtn w-n.lkod Jane Churchill with the "FOLLOW THE | GIRLS" show- lass Xorma Amipp and Michael O'Shca were looking for a preacher when last seen ...Since Ruth Weriion split with Ted Trevor, the Xo. 3 man seems to be her personal manager. . .Barbara Evans H«d ISijuonnnn Sam Sokol a night- Monte Carlo combo. . .Lovely Mrs. Dulaney Hunter, in an all- black gown, dining with Cmdr. Rodman Wanamaker. in his immaculate whites...Lt. Russell, of the Air Corps, proudly escorting lis mother. Mrs. Eihcl Borcen Harriman, another couple. Howard. They say :re are al ways, cool went frosty. ..Kddin Norrig, anoth er principal in the fracaji i Clover clubbing with Jta n g^ the chorine. ..Bob \Valk*r, J, n ! nifer Jones' ex, is hunting a ditj with Diana Lynn.. .Actor Bill Kythe has oyeth only for Margw« Whiting since Anne Baxter giv» him ihe iiho. TWO WELT^-K.NOWN- w a rb>r« have reduced 1 with stunning m-j. denness by dousing themselves with benxedrine. "Vary «Bicient— if they live ..City hall barbs y ! Eillingsley and his imprognabU j Stork Club have brought a sirangt ) reaction. During the torrid sptl] ] ;md the heavy vacation exodus, lili business has increased. Il's'hii friends and standbys, who ftui they must patronize him to fhow they arc with him ..Th<> replacement for Adolph Cheslcy, Eronr OPA adminiKtrator fired via Washington, will be a very close frienj of teoss Ed Flynn.. .Viola Allto, great .siaj- and great lady of tij >--:ii-l:er era. who thrilled the lit- tion in "The White Sistw," i, gi-avely ill at St. "Vincent's. Shs is 70...The ODT is having r«aig- nation pains—some key men Charles Sorenson, former vic«- president of Ford's, is back from Russia with an ord<_-r for 1.500.6M Willys jeeps. I DOLORES GRAY sings at th« Copacabana, but between shows she runs to E! Morroco ;o dine with Macoco. Sounds very confusing- . Jockey Sammy Renick ha.s decided not to open a restaurant. He likes to take in a kn of them with Jerry Higgins. socialite divorcee. . .Bettc Cannon, heiress of the towel millons, is being coached and hopes to go ovei^ seas to sing for the boys—and gtt an ocean "between her and h« Romance . .Maggi MeN«]lis, on her network broadcasts, slips ia code nicss;(ges to her swee'Jt, handsome Clyde Xewhouse. VCTV clever. Stt if you ,can catch her ..Cover girl 52:eanoj-. Hall and Lt. Fletcher ROSEL HYDE, he's a Republi- ; Godfrey, ' recently released Jrora an, will fill toe vacancy on ihe j the Army, hand-holdicg. ..Peggj- PCC. ..Th* Dewey-Hulf duel and ' Radey,-. the pretty lady, at -Ar> itlicr factors highlighting postwar mandoV-.witli. .Fi-edyKaPlan, .'!>« problems have boomed the sale i bridge wizard. . .Prince Olaf ind of Louis Nizer's timely tome. ['Princess Martha at the Zanzibsr, 'What 10 Do with Germany".... I inconspicuous, informal and most Washington has quietly approved ! courteous . to their waiter, who ilans for lend-lease with Italy, a j still has no idea he served royalty onjr-rnnge program to rchabilitntc j ...And, nearby, .1 regal drtsi- hat country when it pets a stable ) model, out wii.h a buyer, goverr.ment and the shooting is. vor .The ousting of former ^hilippinc Resident Commissioner Ilixaldc (Spanish-born — who lie=11110 a Philippine citi7.cn after the onnding of the Commonwealth ir. S3. r >) and replacing him with Col. Carlo? Romulos indicates the new resident. Sergio . Osmenn, will loan the Spanish influence out of 'hilippine ))olitics. Quezon, lialf pnnish, put Spaniards, many not ously ordering: "Bourbor. — but imported.'" Harry 'Enduro) Rosen point! out that Election Day is a natural —J1-7. Wallor Wincholl's column will to ri'siniKxl on his return, Sept 1. Diirinc 1 his :il»oncc J»ck lout's column will appear on 2Monila>-s and Wcd." Looking at Life By ElirCH BRAXDEIS The cultivated onion, according; to FjictoRi-aphs, is -1,000 years old. And some of the hamburger we've had lately has been just about as elderly. That post-war desk. with, (lie built-in i;:irli:ii;<> phnto sounds like sin iilriil piece of furniture for Uic 1'ilifiir of the ]ioe*'N corner. 'ago "for ' 24 hours. A bathinff cap can be left ovur the bandage. Tho ; mixture dissolves the glue whicli attached the cgrs:s to the hair shaft and.'.-th'cy can be combed ou .with .tr'-fli'ic" comb. It also kills'the adult lice.'.Ills objection is that it .leaves an.':'odor. The most clapant and latest prcparaions \vhich are free from . all these objections are phcnyl- .ccllosalve and Bcnxyl cel- losfilv'o'. They arc made by the Carbon, and. Carbide Chemical Corporation. They arc used in 10 to -10 por cent concentration. Tiny radios of the falure will be so small, we're told, that they will he built into cifrarot lighters. What 'are they trying to do —make us give up smoking? BOSSES BEVORTED Boston, Aug. 21—(U P)—A pair of sailors have had hard luck with their money. Vinc-cnt Ruddy of the Boston Navy yard said that Jie 'lost a wallet- containing $220 in Charlestown last Trig-lit. And Irving: Frcier of St. .Toscph, Mich., reported the loss of $100 in a wallet at a bus terminal. ' Almost every time I look at my paper I see a story about some wonderful new improvement, with which I shall be blessed aftor the war is over. For instance, there will bo "flight fillinp- sins ions" whore private .airplanes on pleasure week-end jaunts between anywhere to anywhere can refuel and take off again within a few minutes. You know, of course, that you are Roiiifr to have o private plane, don't you? Probably it will be a helicopter that you keep in your back-yard and that can land on your friend's roof, .or maybe his head. You know also, of course. Ih.'it all life will practically be conducted by the more pressing of buttons and switching: of levers. There will be houses built on .urnstilcs—push a buuon and it turns toward Ihc sun, or away 'rom it, whichever you desire. Push another button, and your nreakfasl. all ready cooked, rolls up to your bed. Turn a switch nnd you fall right nto your pants or skirts 1 or whatever you wear. Press a button, nnd your weekly pay-check comes flying 1o you, while you arc eating- your breakfast. Oh. wait a minute. Am I not n. little abend oven of the post-war dreamers? Am I not wrong about that paycheck? . Won't we still have to go to work aud worry nnd get old and die? • Might not some of these button! and switches nnd lovers set out of order and then what will NVS &°Personally I think that a lot of these promised inventions are » Aif lot of "baloney." ™i' s And am I plat! that they are. A life. of. buttons ar.d lew* would become awful'.y monotonous Because, you sec, man has not yet found a substitute for work. Leisure and ease may be »" right for a while. Em unused things decay, bec<""< stale and rusty and useless. As Ions ;ts we have brains wit h which to think, hands with which to work, feet with which to walk, we must use those tools for living, or we will rot. I do believe in progress, but I also believe, in tradition. I Think that science ar.u engineering- are wonderful acfci***" monts. But no scientist, no engineer, no chemist, no physicist h«* yet oven able to improve Uie seal of wan. And no one, as yet. has been nble to refute what is written in the third chapter of Genesis: "». tho "sweat of thy face shall thott m^ e.-il bread." BUY WAR BONDS